Guild Education draws $8.5 million in Series A funding led by Redpoint

According to a 2014 report from Complete College America, a nonprofit group based in Indianapolis, just 19 percent of full-time students earn a bachelor’s degree in four years at public universities. The stats are even worse at community colleges, where five percent of full-time students earn an associates degree within two years, and just 15.9 percent earn a one- to two-year certificate on time.

Some of why students are taking longer to graduate centers on the lack of clear planning, changing majors, changing universities, and taking unnecessary courses, suggests a variety of research. But Rachel Carlson, the cofounder and CEO of Denver-based Guild Education, says there are plenty of non-academic factors at play, too, including soaring tuition costs and shift work that can interfere with community college class schedules.

To help those many students who are working their way through college, as well as help companies that recognize the importance of helping employees realize their full potential, 16-month-old Guild partners with employers including Chipotle to offer education as a benefit, right alongside healthcare.

How does it work? The IRS already allows for employers to offer up to $5,250 annually of tax-free education to help any employee as long as the benefits “are provided by reason of their employment relationship.” Employers can also pay beyond $5,250 if they like, though employees generally have to pay tax on the additional amount. (Qualified employees can also apply for an additional $5,815 in available federal grants.)

Either way, Guild’s platform makes it a lot easier for companies to turn this education expense into an employee perk by enabling their staffers to earn college credits and pursue undergraduate and graduate degrees. And it does it in two ways. Guild has created some of its programming, which currently includes GED, ESL, and undergraduate-level management training courses. It also has ties to four online college programs, including Colorado State University’s Global Campus, Western Governors University, Bellevue University, and Brandman University (the online arm of Chapman University). A few of the undergraduate degrees that Guild offers through these university partners center on business and advanced manufacturing.

When employees take Guild’s courses, the revenue goes straight to Guild. When they take the universities’ courses, the schools pay Guild roughly the cost savings they enjoy from not having to pay for admissions marketing. (Guild doesn’t break out this cost publicly.)

It all adds up, so to speak. Chipotle claims its employees can pay as little as $250 per year to go to college.

Guild has competition, including from plenty of universities that offer online courses directly, and from companies like Udacity, which is working with employers to create programming that caters to their employees specifically.

But you can see the appeal to employers, who (over time) could see a broad menu of schools to funnel its employees toward. Right now, Guild works with the aforementioned four schools and with six employers in addition to Chipotle. However, Carlson — who has both an MBA and a master’s degree in higher education from Stanford — says Guild is running numerous other pilots and has “more [interest] than we can support.”

Certainly, VCs seem to like what it’s preaching. “It’s no surprise that education is the fastest growing corporate benefit program in the U.S.,” says investor Scott Raney of Redpoint Ventures. He calls Guild’s proposition a “win for all parties.” Indeed, the 38-person company just raised $8.5 million in Series A funding led by Redpoint, with participation from Social Capital and its seed backers, Harrison Metal, Cowboy Ventures, and investor and Stanford lecturer Fern Mandelbaum.

Pictured at page top: Cofounder and CEO Rachel Carlson, who formed the company with her former classmate, Brittany Stich. Stich is currently the company’s head of student services and academics. Like Carlson, she holds both an MBA and master’s degree in education from Stanford.